Energy facts from oil to electricity

In Support of Nuclear Power

These articles are not intended for book reviews; however, it’s important to highlight specific books that have an important message about energy.

For example, Wade Allison’s book, Radiation and Reason, was highlighted in the article, More on Radiation.

The slow death of America’s nuclear power industry is largely the result of anti-nuclear activists convincing legislatures and Americans that nuclear power isn’t safe.

The anti-nuclear crowd is wrong in this respect, and a new book by Meredith Angwin explains how average people can fight back against the antinuclear extremists.

Her book, Campaigning for Clean Air, is a “how to” book for people who want to support nuclear power and counteract extremists.

Campaigning for Clean Air also provides information about why nuclear power is safe and why the three nuclear accidents, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima, have not had the terrible consequences bandied about by extremists who oppose nuclear power.

Book cover

One note that struck a chord was her description of how manipulating sample size can create the impression that, “Redheads are taking over the world.” Extremists use this technique to mislead people. It’s similar to the misleading “97% of scientists agree” consensus statement that is repeated ad nauseam by the media about climate change.

The “97% statement” is also based on a manipulation of sample size, while also distorting the truth, because nearly everyone agrees that climate is changing and that people have had some effect on climate. It’s also misleading because it doesn’t address the question: What’s causing global warming and climate change?

The earlier article mentioned above, also provided details of the Chernobyl and Three Mile Island accidents. Specifically:

“Chernobyl was the worst accident at a nuclear power plant and it killed 31 of the early responders in a short time. Subsequently, there have been reports of 4,000 thyroid cancers, but very few additional deaths. And Chernobyl was a poorly designed nuclear reactor without a containment structure, where the so-called accident was caused by inappropriate testing of the reactor.” (The reactor was known to be unstable at low load, but unauthorized testing proceeded anyway.)

“Three Mile Island, the only reactor accident in the United States, had virtually zero radiation released beyond the reactor.”

Two additional references on the Chernobyl accident mentioned in my article are:

Annex J; Exposures and Effects of the Chernobyl Accident, by UNSCEAR

Observations on Chernobyl after 25 Years of Radiofobia, by Zbigniew Jaworoski

Meredith Angwin has been an active supporter of nuclear power, and her book, Campaigning for Clean Air, describes many of her experiences. She uses these experiences to explain how anyone who is interested in this important energy source can support nuclear power and win over people and lawmakers, so they also support nuclear power.

Keeping our existing nuclear power plants is even more important after the debacle with Westinghouse declaring bankruptcy, which threatens the completion of the four reactors currently under construction.

Without popular support, nuclear power will continue its slow death in the United States, where there may be no nuclear power plants in operation by the end of this century.

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Clexit For a Brighter Future establishes why the United States should withdraw from the UNFCCC treaty, a treaty most Americans don’t know was ratified by the Senate.

Yes.I have read your web site. The article you reference here provides additional useful information. You missed my earlier article in which I commented on Thorcon at http://bit.ly/2m7JE7F
A critical number is the cost to construct, which for plants being built today is $6,000 / KW. Your article indicates a cost to build of $1,200 / KW, Frankly, I think you need to prove this cost. Too many people have made promises, such as cutting costs by building in a factory, that fail to materialize. If you can demonstrate a cost to build of under $3,000 / KW you will have a winner. Ultra-supercritical coal cost to build is approximately $2,700 / KW.
By the way. I hold no trek with the false promise of wind and solar. They are way too costly, and fossil fuels will be around for a long while.

Donn, the other consideration about Three Mile Island is that it was intentionally caused. My dad was a member of the Washington state nuclear commission at the time and after the occurrence he told me that they were notified that something was going to happen, they just didn’t know where. And the engineer in the control room was a member of Greenpeace. Plus the radiation never exceeded back ground radiation

Actually, Rod has quite a few posts about this. Search his blog, Atomic Insights, for Three Mile Island. https://atomicinsights.com

One of the reasons that I think TMI was an accident, not sabotage, was that the same scenario occurred earlier at Davis Besse, but the operators were able to go off-book (so to speak) and figure out what to do. So the plant was okay in the Davis-Besse incident.

Donn, do you have anything on just how”bad”the leak out of the Japanese reactor really is? Everything you hear out of the media makes it sound like everyone on the west coast is already dead, we just don’t know it yet.
Thanks for any information you might have
Steve

I think of my book as the “then what” book…if you are in favor of nuclear energy, “then what” do you do about it? The opponents often refer to Alinsky’s book, “Rules for Radicals,” but people who support nuclear are not usually happy with Alinsky techniques.

My book is a guidebook for people who want to support our nuclear plants, but may not know where to start. It’s about how you can support nuclear energy, either rather quietly (at your computer) or in public. I think it fills a need. I am very grateful that you wrote about it.

FWIW, I have very almost nothing about new types of nuclear energy (Thorcon, for example) in my book. I feel my techniques for supporting nuclear energy are general, and in all honesty, I have spent the vast majority of my time supporting existing plants. But when new types of plants start up, the techniques in my book should still work.

A book lives for a while. It’s not a blog post. “Rules for Radicals” was published in 1989, and is still in use. So, in my book, I encourage people to be knowledgeable about about their local issues and then support their local nuclear plants. Maybe, someday soon, people will be buying my book to help them encourage local acceptance of Molten Salt Reactors. I hope my book will be useful to many people, over many years. This may be hubris on my part. I know my book is useful now, and I hope it will be useful in the future!

Thank you. Your book takes a fundamental and practical approach to supporting nuclear power, no matter whether it is a new plant, or is an existing plant. The objective is to help people who want to support nuclear power.